You would be hard pressed to find a company that's consistently rolling out positive hardware revisions of its media players more than Western Digital. Earlier this year, we took a look at the WD TV Live Media Player that added Netflix streaming into their hardware model. But that player, and every player previous to it, lacked any type of internal storage to save all of your content rather than streaming it off your home network. It always seemed odd that a hard drive manufacturer didn't delve into providing central storage for all your downloaded content. Enter the Western Digital TV Live Hub. Not only does it include a 1 Terabyte hard drive to store content, the WD TV Live Hub player has been upgraded to take advantage of HDMI 1.4, received an updated UI, can be used as a media server, included Blockbuster On Demand access for more streaming content and even a Facebook login of the people needing to stay plugged into their social circle at all times.

Similar to previous versions of the WD TV Live media player, there's not much in the box beyond the actual unit, remote, power supply and the instruction manual. In order to utilize the hard drive, the width of the player has been expanded over the media player, but the height is smaller. The black, sleek design fits in easily with any home theater setup, although the LED indicator light for hard drive use can be distracting in a darkened theater (the light can be turned off in the menu). On the front of the player, you will find a power button as well as a single USB port for plugging in a thumb stick for expanded storage. On the rear of the unit, you will find the power connection, component and composite video jacks, an optical audio port, a HDMI port, the network jack and a second USB port for another thumb drive or another media device like a camera or external hard drive.

The remote has finally been upgraded, although you will be familiar with the rubberized, utilitarian feel of the buttons and remote's general design. It's about twice the length of the previous remote in order to include a full keypad as well as multi-colored buttons to jump around in the user interface. You have the ability to assign actions to specific buttons on the remote, either through the on-screen interface or when connecting to the Live Hub from a PC for a visual interface to adjust the buttons on the remote. I'm glad that they provided the functionality, but the remote still felt limited compared to the majority of the programmable universal remotes I've tested, specifically all touchscreen models. Still, the WD remote offers vastly more functionality compared to the simplicity of the new Apple TV remote.

Taking a page out of the XBMC or Boxee playbook, Western Digital has created a more friendly, customizable UI for the new Live Hub. It's a big step up from their previous player, both in design and functionality; more impressive if you have only used previous WD players . Western Digital is also promising future themes coming from the community as soon as they open up the platform's XML engine to the public. The UI also makes tasks like downloading new firmware more clear as well as general sorting of content. If you want to view content by file type rather than title, you can. If you want to filter by genre or favorite movies, you can. This is accomplished by the unit's ability to assign meta data to your content automatically.

If you are familiar with Gracenote, you know that they provide all the access to song title / artists / album covers for Apple when anyone uses iTunes. Western Digital is attempting a similar concept by providing the ability to scrape all of your content and figure out what meta data is supposed to be attached with it. For example, if you have a quantumofsolace.avi file sitting on your hard drive, it's going to figure out that the Quantum of Solace film information is supposed to be attached with it. It's also setup to figure out which episode and season of a tv show that you are watching. I've used similar services with plugins on other HTPC units, but the implementation feels a bit more streamlined here. It's certainly not perfect at figuring out what you are watching, but you have the ability to correct the data as well.

Identical to previous players, you will find incredibly robust support for a variety of file types. It really makes the Apple TV closed platform look silly, if you are the type that wants freedom of choice when it comes to video / audio content. It handles 1080p content like a champ without a hint of stuttering or lip sync problems. This is the first player that I would consider a legitimate rival to a physical Blu-ray disc in regards to video quality, especially when using the mkv or mov file formats. They rate the player as having the ability to store up to 120 movies, likely using the DVD9 format as a metric (or 8 GB of space per disc). Obviously, storing just the movie files on the player allows for more space to be utilized as well as deciding what level of bitrate that you are comfortable with when watching movies / television shows. Even when encoding video in a high-quality HD mkv file, you are going to find a tremendous amount of space for your movies, music and other media files.

Another major selling point of this player is the ability to use the Live Hub as your house media server. If the device is connected to your home network, you can stream content off the 1TB hard drive onto other net connected devices in the house. More to the point, connecting another Western Digital player to another TV in the house allows for this functionality. You can also connect via computer to watch as well as use the Twonky Media Server interface to upload new content onto the hard drive. If you rip and encode all of your media on your Macbook in the bedroom, just upload it to the Media Server through the interface and watch it in your home theater after the files have been moved. You can also stream it from your laptop / desktop, but having it in one central place helps anyone have access to it in the house. You can also connect up to your iTunes libraries to play non-DRM files.